Todd: thanks for posting that, and apended to it are some listener's comment's; in my on-going defense of John Simon as an abrasive but major American film critic, here is one of those comments:
"N.P. Thompson said...
Thanks for posting these historic meetings between three great writers – I can’t wait until I’m in a time and place when/where I can listen to them at my leisure. But until then, I felt compelled to comment on the misleading, out of context quote from Simon, the bit about “I can’t wait until AIDS kills them all!” Simon’s detractors, including that old fuddy dud radio interviewer Leonard Lopate, nearly always resuscitate that line when they feel the need to paint Simon as homophobic. What happened was: In 1985, on leaving a production of a play wherein the director had particularly compromised the playwright’s intentions, Simon, as we’re all wont to do in private moments of political incorrectness, mentioned to a friend the above salvo. Unfortunately, the gossip columnist (and professional hatemonger) Liz Smith overheard the remark, and she created the resulting fracas. To me, it’s Smith who deserves the comparisons to Miloševic. What people rarely mention is that soon thereafter, Simon granted a lengthy interview to the gay newspaper New York Native, in which he and composer Ned Rorem addressed what led up to that “kills them all” statement and in general put to rest the issue of Simon’s supposed homophobia. A decade or so later, Rorem republished this interview in his book Other Entertainment – it makes for informative reading."
